I posted this elsewhere but it deserves it's own thread.
Sitting in the evening in Konstanz,over the lake from Friedrichshafen(Eurobike)I couldn't help noticing that every bike looked almost new. I spoke to a sales guy at the show and he advised that is why the rrp had to be high,with big margins for the dealer. A 2000 euro plus bike is really worthless after 3 years but the dealer will give perhaps 4-500 euro trade in against a new bike,effectively he is giving you back your own money but that money is used for the deposit on the new bike. Your battery is probably pretty much exhausted and the replacement cost might be 700 euros.
Hence there is no incentive to retain an old bike,you are almost forced into changing an e-bike every few years. It's good business for the bike retailers but hardly green,what happens to the old bikes and batteries?
Dave
KudosCycles
Sitting in the evening in Konstanz,over the lake from Friedrichshafen(Eurobike)I couldn't help noticing that every bike looked almost new. I spoke to a sales guy at the show and he advised that is why the rrp had to be high,with big margins for the dealer. A 2000 euro plus bike is really worthless after 3 years but the dealer will give perhaps 4-500 euro trade in against a new bike,effectively he is giving you back your own money but that money is used for the deposit on the new bike. Your battery is probably pretty much exhausted and the replacement cost might be 700 euros.
Hence there is no incentive to retain an old bike,you are almost forced into changing an e-bike every few years. It's good business for the bike retailers but hardly green,what happens to the old bikes and batteries?
Dave
KudosCycles